It's August 28, 2025, 01:32:42 PM
DJ QuikTha Dogg Pound Snoop DoggWCBishop Lamont
#1 lil wayne, #3 drake............ SMH this list is so fuckin gay
I would agree with the above, but when it comes to rap, little kids and flavour-of-the-month "fans" are really the only ones who would be anticipating a Drake/Wayne album over a Dre/Jay album. I mean, anyone who knows ANYTHING about music (not even rap) would KNOW that Dre coming out with an album is kinda a big deal.
its a sad sign of the times but this is the music world we live in...its gonna keep turning whether people agree or not...i stopped giving a shit years ago
Quote from: CHUCK KNOXXX on January 09, 2011, 12:35:08 PMits a sad sign of the times but this is the music world we live in...its gonna keep turning whether people agree or not...i stopped giving a shit years ago Well, people are agreeing. Fact is the generation before us felt the same way about our music that most of us feel about today's. And ten years from now, some other rap act will come out and Wayne fans will say, "God! Why can't music be like it was in 2008?". In the end, these are all just LISTS. Different people's opinions about music. So some magazine thinks Wayne is more anticipated than Detox. It ain't gonna change anything.
Lil B should be number 1
Music in general will always have that "it's not like it used to be" talk, but rap is a different story. Since hip-hop is relatively new to the world interms of music, it has only gone through that "phase" 2 or 3 times with all that "it's not like it used to be" talk. Some people wish we could go back to N.W.A. and Public Enemy, some wish we can go back to Chronic, Doggystyle, BIG & Pac, others are still in love with the 2001, Nas/Jay & DMX era, while many would just be happy to have GRODT, Documentary and SSLP rap back. There is no denying that all those eras and their "best to offer" were loved by most, if not all real rap fans. But can you really say that about anything after '05 or '06? Like, what exactly defines "this era"? This might come off as completely irrelevant to the topic, but I was around and fully aware of the hip-hop scene in '99/00/'01 and although there was all that "it's not like it used to be" talk, I can clearly state that it's much different now. Mainstream rap isn't even rap anymore, it's a cross between techno and boyband pop. So yes, I think now in 2011, we have the right to say "RAP is not what it used to be". At least at the mainstream level.
Y'all out of touch with the times. The list, while being a little hip, is more or less accurate.